All Stories

  1. Barriers to Mainstream Adoption of Circular Packaging in Indonesia
  2. Improving household waste management in Indonesia: A mixed-methods approach for waste Sorting
  3. Multiple negative impacts of marine plastic pollution on tropical coastal ecosystem services, and human health and well-being
  4. From riverbank to the sea: An initial assessment of plastic pollution along the Ciliwung River, Indonesia
  5. Improving the Assessment of Risk Factors Relevant to Potential Carcinogenicity of Gene Therapies: A Consensus Article
  6. Archetypes to categorise upstream packaging strategies for a circular economy
  7. hInGeTox: A human-based in vitro platform to evaluate lentivirus contribution to genotoxicity
  8. Predictors of Waste Management Behaviours in Coastal Communities in Indonesia: The Role of Community Attachment and Environmental Concern
  9. Toxic Chemicals Still Threaten Whales and Dolphins, Even After 30 Years of Pollution Control.
  10. Endocrine Disruption Is Reduced but Still Widespread in Wild Roach (Rutilus rutilus) Living in English Rivers
  11. A Literature and Practice Review to Develop Archetypes of Upstream Packaging Strategies for a Circular Economy
  12. Feminizing effects of ethinylestradiol in roach (Rutilus rutilus) populations with different estrogenic pollution exposure histories
  13. HIV- 1 lentivirus tethering to the genome is associated with transcription factor binding sites found in genes that favour virus survival
  14. Polychlorinated biphenyls are associated with reduced testes weights in harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena)
  15. Investigation into Adaptation in Genes Associated with Response to Estrogenic Pollution in Populations of Roach (Rutilus rutilus) Living in English Rivers
  16. Juvenile harbor porpoises in the UK are exposed to a more neurotoxic mixture of polychlorinated biphenyls than adults
  17. Levels of Polychlorinated Biphenyls Are Still Associated with Toxic Effects in Harbor Porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) Despite Having Fallen below Proposed Toxicity Thresholds
  18. Early embryonic exposure of freshwater gastropods to pharmaceutical 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors results in a surprising open-coiled “banana-shaped” shell
  19. A restatement of the natural science evidence base on the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals on wildlife
  20. Molecular isolation and characterization of the kisspeptin system, KISS and GPR54 genes in roach Rutilus rutilus
  21. Riverine fish diversity varies according to geographical isolation and land use modification
  22. Correction: Corrigendum: Whole genome analysis of a schistosomiasis-transmitting freshwater snail
  23. Whole genome analysis of a schistosomiasis-transmitting freshwater snail
  24. Scientific principles for the identification of endocrine-disrupting chemicals: a consensus statement
  25. Use of a Battery of Chemical and Ecotoxicological Methods for the Assessment of the Efficacy of Wastewater Treatment Processes to Remove Estrogenic Potency
  26. No evidence of exposure to environmental estrogens in two feral fish species sampled from the Yarra River, Australia: A comparison with Northern Hemisphere studies
  27. Freshwater gastropod snail sexual development is not effected by male vertebrate hormones
  28. A proposed framework for the systematic review and integrated assessment (SYRINA) of endocrine disrupting chemicals
  29. From the Editor’s Desk, Editor’s Highlights, Letters to the Editor
  30. Manufacturing doubt about endocrine disrupter science – A rebuttal of industry-sponsored critical comments on the UNEP/WHO report “State of the Science of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals 2012”
  31. Effects of Exposure to WwTW Effluents over Two Generations on Sexual Development and Breeding in Roach Rutilus rutilus
  32. Removal of ecotoxicity of 17α-ethinylestradiol using TAML/peroxide water treatment
  33. The Nuclear Receptors of Biomphalaria glabrata and Lottia gigantea: Implications for Developing New Model Organisms
  34. Environmental concentrations of anti-androgenic pharmaceuticals do not impact sexual disruption in fish alone or in combination with steroid oestrogens
  35. A path forward in the debate over health impacts of endocrine disrupting chemicals
  36. Populations of a cyprinid fish are self-sustaining despite widespread feminization of males
  37. No substantial changes in estrogen receptor and estrogen-related receptor orthologue gene transcription in Marisa cornuarietis exposed to estrogenic chemicals
  38. Science and policy on endocrine disrupters must not be mixed: a reply to a “common sense” intervention by toxicology journal editors
  39. Assessing the exposure risk and impacts of pharmaceuticals in the environment on individuals and ecosystems
  40. Modeling of Steroid Estrogen Contamination in UK and South Australian Rivers Predicts Modest Increases in Concentrations in the Future
  41. The Impact of Endocrine Disruption: A Consensus Statement on the State of the Science
  42. The occurrence, causes, and consequences of estrogens in the aquatic environment
  43. The hidden costs of flexible fertility
  44. Additional Treatment of Wastewater Reduces Endocrine Disruption in Wild Fish—A Comparative Study of Tertiary and Advanced Treatments
  45. Estrogenic activity of tropical fish food can alter baseline vitellogenin concentrations in male fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas)
  46. The Consequences of Feminization in Breeding Groups of Wild Fish
  47. 17β-Oestradiol may prolong reproduction in seasonally breeding freshwater gastropod molluscs
  48. The unexpected sources of organotin contamination in aquatic toxicological laboratory studies
  49. Statistical Modeling Suggests that Antiandrogens in Effluents from Wastewater Treatment Works Contribute to Widespread Sexual Disruption in Fish Living in English Rivers
  50. Why Public Health Agencies Cannot Depend on Good Laboratory Practices as a Criterion for Selecting Data: The Case of Bisphenol A
  51. Exposure to Treated Sewage Effluent Disrupts Reproduction and Development in the Seasonally Breeding Ramshorn Snail (Subclass: Pulmonata, Planorbarius corneus)
  52. Validation of a Method for Measuring Sperm Quality and Quantity in Reproductive Toxicity Tests with Pair-Breeding Male Fathead Minnows (Pimephales promelas)
  53. Roach, Sex, and Gender-Bending Chemicals: The Feminization of Wild Fish in English Rivers
  54. Endocrine Disruptors: Relevance to Humans, Animals and Ecosystems: Research Highlights from the National Research Programme NRP50
  55. An ecological assessment of bisphenol-A: Evidence from comparative biology
  56. Chapel Hill bisphenol A expert panel consensus statement: Integration of mechanisms, effects in animals and potential to impact human health at current levels of exposure
  57. Functional Associations between Two Estrogen Receptors, Environmental Estrogens, and Sexual Disruption in the Roach (Rutilus rutilus)
  58. Novel Estrogen Receptor-Related Transcripts in Marisa cornuarietis; a Freshwater Snail with Reported Sensitivity to Estrogenic Chemicals
  59. COMPRENDO: Focus and Approach
  60. Health Effects in Fish of Long-Term Exposure to Effluents from Wastewater Treatment Works
  61. Introduction: The Ecological Relevance of Chemically Induced Endocrine Disruption in Wildlife
  62. Is There a Causal Association between Genotoxicity and the Imposex Effect?
  63. Predicted Exposures to Steroid Estrogens in U.K. Rivers Correlate with Widespread Sexual Disruption in Wild Fish Populations
  64. Assessing the Sensitivity of Different Life Stages for Sexual Disruption in Roach ( Rutilus rutilus ) Exposed to Effluents from Wastewater Treatment Works
  65. Comparative responses of molluscs and fish to environmental estrogens and an estrogenic effluent
  66. Endocrine disruption in juvenile roach from English rivers: a preliminary study
  67. Erratum to “Comparative responses of molluscs and fish to environmental estrogens and an estrogenic effluent”
  68. Comparative responses of molluscs and fish to environmental estrogens and an estrogenic effluent
  69. Endocrine disruption, parasites and pollutants in wild freshwater fish
  70. Endocrine disruption in wild freshwater fish
  71. Wild Intersex Roach (Rutilus rutilus) Have Reduced Fertility1
  72. Reduction in the estrogenic activity of a treated sewage effluent discharge to an english river as a result of a decrease in the concentration of industrially derived surfactants
  73. Altered Sexual Maturation and Gamete Production in Wild Roach (Rutilus rutilus) Living in Rivers That Receive Treated Sewage Effluents1
  74. Sexual disruption in a second species of wild cyprinid fish (the gudgeon, Gobio gobio) in United Kingdom Freshwaters
  75. A histological description of intersexuality in the roach
  76. Exposure of Juvenile Roach (Rutilus rutilus) to Treated Sewage Effluent Induces Dose-Dependent and Persistent Disruption in Gonadal Duct Development
  77. Long-Term Temporal Changes in the Estrogenic Composition of Treated Sewage Effluent and Its Biological Effects on Fish
  78. Estrogenic potency of effluent from two sewage treatment works in the United Kingdom
  79. Demasculinisation of sexually mature male common carp, Cyprinus carpio, exposed to 4-tert-pentylphenol during spermatogenesis
  80. Review of suggested testing methods for endocrine-disrupting chemicals
  81. Widespread Sexual Disruption in Wild Fish
  82. Endocrine Disruption in Wildlife: A Critical Review of the Evidence
  83. ESTROGENIC ACTIVITY IN FIVE UNITED KINGDOM RIVERS DETECTED BY MEASUREMENT OF VITELLOGENESIS IN CAGED MALE TROUT
  84. Measurement of vitellogenin, a biomarker for exposure to oestrogenic chemicals, in a wide variety of cyprinid fish
  85. A SURVEY OF ESTROGENIC ACTIVITY IN UNITED KINGDOM INLAND WATERS
  86. INHIBITION OF TESTICULAR GROWTH IN RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) EXPOSED TO ESTROGENIC ALKYLPHENOLIC CHEMICALS
  87. Gestational and lactational exposure of rats to xenoestrogens results in reduced testicular size and sperm production.
  88. Vitellogenesis as a biomarker for estrogenic contamination of the aquatic environment.
  89. A variety of environmentally persistent chemicals, including some phthalate plasticizers, are weakly estrogenic.
  90. Environmentally persistent alkylphenolic compounds are estrogenic
  91. Detergent components in sewage effluent are weakly oestrogenic to fish: An in vitro study using rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) hepatocytes
  92. Male sexual development in "a sea of oestrogen"